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Ships urged to take easy measure against pirates

Military liaison groups are urging ships in the UAE and the surrounding region to report their whereabouts as a precaution against the expanding reach of Somali pirates.

Following such practice will allow ships to receive threat warnings and change course if necessary. And it alerts counterpiracy naval forces to where the vessels they are meant to protect are spread out across the vast high-risk waters, namely the Gulf of Aden and much of the Indian Ocean.

“There are not enough resources to adequately patrol and adequately provide security, which is why we stress best management practices – including registering,” said Capt Michael Lodge, the officer-in-charge of the Maritime Liaison Office (Marlo), a US Navy group based in Bahrain that promotes registration and other measures to shipping companies in the region.

“It’s risk reduction,” he said. “There’s no reason not to register.”

The main point of contact for ships is the Dubai-based UK Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO), which monitors the Gulf of Aden and waters as far south as Tanzania and almost as far east as India. The organisation shares ships’ whereabouts with warships patrolling the waters.

Ships travelling through the Gulf of Aden can also register with Maritime Security Centre-Horn of Africa, part of the EU Naval Force, one of three joint naval forces that patrol the area.

About three-quarters of vessels travelling through high-risk waters notify either group, according to estimates from the UKMTO and the maritime security centre.

These organisations and two others – Marlo and the Nato Shipping Centre – visit ports and shipping companies to urge them to register, as well as follow other best practises. These include protecting vessels with barbed wire, 24-hour lookouts and a “safe room” where the crew can hide if attacked.
Registering with liaison groups does not, however, guarantee against piracy.

Four of eight recently hijacked ships had registered with Maritime Security Centre-Horn of Africa, said Lt Cdr Jimmie Adamsson, the spokesman for EU Naval Force.

Ships that report their whereabouts with UKMTO also get captured, said Lt Cdr Susie Thomson, a spokeswoman for the organisation said. She declined to give specifics.

Both Lt Cdr Adamsson and Lt Cdr Thomson said reporting offers more benefits than not reporting.

If a vessel registers, then comes under attack, navies have a better idea about its movements, cargo and crew.

“We know which ships are transiting, when they are transiting and where they are heading. We can therefore more easily provide help in case it is needed,” said Lt Cdr Adamsson.

“If a ship is registered it can be alerted about pirate activity in their area. So what they get are warnings and an intelligence picture,” said Lt Cdr Thomson.
One Dubai-based shipping manager said all the vessels in his company register with UKMTO. They receive frequent updates from the organisation about what attacks have occurred when and where.

“It gives you a general sense of the security situation at the time,” he said. “It’s very, very valuable information.”

chuang@thenational.ae

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Published by Combined Maritime Forces

CMF is a unique multi-national collective of 32 like-minded nations, dedicated to promoting security and free flow of commerce across 3.2 million square miles of international waters in the Red Sea, Gulf of Aden, Somali Basin, the Indian Ocean and the Gulf. CMF’s main focus areas are disrupting terrorism, preventing piracy, reducing illegal activities, and promoting a safe maritime environment for all.
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